
11 Mar 1929

Ship Ahoy
Comedian Pat West performs his vaudeville act.
The mortgage of an elderly couple is about to be foreclosed, but their daughter vows to get a job in the big city, where her virtue is preserved through the efforts of the handsome hero.
11 Mar 1929
Comedian Pat West performs his vaudeville act.
30 Jun 1928
Val and Ernie Stanton make their second appearance in a Vitaphone short. This time out the two basically stand in the same spot as they re-create their vaudeville act, which includes a few songs as well as a couple comedy routines.
21 Jul 1929
Harry Fox performs his vaudeville act.
11 May 1935
A New york producer sends a spy to a nightclub to report back on the musical acts.
17 Oct 1928
Comedian Chaz Chase performs his vaudeville act.
20 Aug 1929
Georgie Price tells Bryan Foy, who is to direct his short film, that he is nervous about performing to a camera and microphone instead of an audience. He then sings a couple songs, in an Al Jolson/Eddie Cantor style.
11 Sep 1928
Eddie White performs his vaudeville act.
28 Jan 1929
The comedy team of Jack Born and Elmer Lawrence perform their vaudeville act.
09 Dec 1929
A comedic team. The Ann seems to try and come across as a Mae West type. Jay plays the role of the straight partner.
15 May 1930
Ben Bernie and his orchestra play a few songs for a vitaphone recording.
04 Sep 1928
Jack Waldron performs his stand-up vaudeville act.
20 Apr 1928
The scene is a parlor out West, with Ray Mayer sitting at the piano in is cowboy duds - hat, scarf, and chaps. He plays a little barrel-house music and then introduces Edith Evans, who enters wearing fur. She sings - her voice a light-opera soprano - while Mayer plays.
07 Sep 1946
This short was released in connection with the 20th anniversary of Warner Brothers' first exhibition of the Vitaphone sound-on-film process on 6 August 1926. The film highlights Thomas A. Edison and Alexander Graham Bell's efforts that contributed to sound movies and acknowledges the work of Lee De Forest. Brief excerpts from the August 1926 exhibition follow. Clips are then shown from a number of Warner Brothers features, four from the 1920s, the remainder from 1946/47.
26 Dec 1931
Billy falls asleep and dreams Robert L. Ripley takes him on a tour of Believe-It-or-Not land to see many oddities. Vitaphone No. 1320.
05 May 1929
A musical Vitaphone short by Larry Ceballos. The songs include "Over the Garden Wall", It Was the Dawn of Love", and Baily and Barnum singing "Pretty Little Bom Bom Maid From Bombay".
30 Jan 1932
Robert Ripley shows a pretty blond a shrunken head and an iron execution chamber. Vitaphone No. 1336.
30 Apr 1932
In this short film, Robert L. Ripley introduces narrator Leo Donnelly who presents various "Believe It or Not" oddities from around the world as gathered by Ripley. Segments include a NYC clothier that caters to very large men and circus elephant grooming. Vitaphone No. 1363.
16 Apr 1932
Robert Ripley presents a well-dressed cocktail party an assortment of drawings and film clips showing the world's youngest parents and the largest bible. Vitaphone No. 1362.
14 May 1932
This omnibus of film clips include a Savanna golf course made from Civil War trenches, wooden Indians used ourside cigar stores, an American Indian artist from South Dakota who paints upside down, the smallest residence house, a Bronx River statue with mysterious Civil War origins, the Ocean Grove community in New Jersey that closes on Sundays and a futuristic automated parking garage. Vitaphone No. 1364.
21 Sep 1928
A cycle of songs performed by the singer Florence Brady.